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The Unyielding Current: How Ethiopia’s GERD Forged a New Geopolitical Reality and Charts a Course to the Sea

The Unyielding Current: How Ethiopia’s GERD Forged a New Geopolitical Reality and Charts a Course to the Sea

The dam was the battle; the sea is the horizon

A Introduction: The Phoenix from the Ashes of Sabotage

They said it was a fool’s errand. For over a decade, the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD) was a monument not just to concrete and ambition, but to a nation’s resilience in the face of a perfect storm of opposition. It was David, not just against one Goliath, but against a chorus of them. From the hallowed halls of the United Nations to the diplomatic salons of Cairo and Khartoum, from financial strangleholds to veiled threats, the message was clear: This river is not yours to command.

But Ethiopia listened to a different rhythm—the ancient pulse of the Blue Nile, a river that springs from its highlands, yet whose bounty it was historically denied. The nation embarked on a journey that would become a modern-day parable of defiance and determination. The completion of the GERD is not merely an engineering feat; it is a geopolitical earthquake whose tremors are reshaping the Horn of Africa and beyond. It is the proof that a river cannot be held hostage forever, and neither can a nation’s destiny. As the Roman poet Virgil once wrote, “They can because they think they can.” Ethiopia thought it could, and so it did.

The Siege and the Sacrifice: A Decade of Defiance

The story of the GERD is etched in the collective memory of Ethiopians. It is a narrative punctuated by what can only be described as a multi-dimensional sabotage

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هل يبدو غناؤنا جميلًا عند الإثيوبيين؟

ثقافة وفنون موسى حامد 20-سبتمبر-2020 شكلت الأعلام الإثيوبية والأخوة بين الشعبين حضورًا قويًا في اعتصام القيادة واحتفالات الثورة (وسائل التواصل) ظهرتْ في الفترة الأخيرة، عدد

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Capturing Africa’s high returns

Landry Signé, March, 2018 Editor’s note:  This op-ed was originally published by Project Syndicate. Since 2000, at least half of the world’s fastest-growing economies have been

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